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Solution to the Short GRB Mystery D. Q. Lamb (U. Chicago) HETE-2 Swift “New Views of the Universe” Kavli Institute Symposium in Honor of David Schramm Chicago, IL, 9 December 2005 The Long and Short of It 500 160 836 IPN BURSTS 400 1971 BATSE BURSTS NUMBER OF BURSTS NUMBER OF BURSTS 120 80 300 200 40 100 0 0.01 0.1 1 10 DURATION, SECONDS 100 1000 0 0.01 0.1 Slide courtesy of K. Hurley 1 10 T90 DURATION, SECONDS 100 1000 IPN, HETE, and Swift Short GRBs in Context of All BATSE GRBs 100-300 keV FLUENCE/25-100 keV FLUENCE 100 BATSE BURSTS IPN, HETE, Swift BURSTS 10 1 0.1 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 T90, SECONDS Slide courtesy of K. Hurley 1000 Two of David Schramm’s Papers Merging neutron star-black hole binaries (1974) Merging neutron star-neutron star binaries (1989) Possible Short GRB Progenitors Magnetar Highly magnetized young neutron star (1014-1015 G) Crustal breaking and magnetic reconnection = “hyperflares” Short (0.2 s) hard pulse and long (~ 200-300 s) soft pulse Dominant timescale is Alfven velocity in neutron star Collapsar Core collapse of massive star (black hole + short-lived accretion disk) Explains long GRBs Dominant timescale is set by jet propagation through collapsing core (~10-20 s) Compact binary mergers Merging compact objects (NS-NS or NS-BH) Hypercritical accretion onto a newly formed black hole Dominant timescale is set by accretion disk viscosity Slide courtesy of D. Frail Key Questions How far away are they? How much energy do they release? Is the energy release isotropic or collimated? Are the central engines short- or long-lived? Is there any non-relativistic ejecta? In what type of environments do they occur? Host galaxy (and offset) Circumburst environment GRB 050509B: Swift Detection BAT detected very faint short GRB XRT detected 11 (!) photons beginning at T+62 s Detection of X-ray afterglow crucially important: Showed that short GRBs have afterglows No optical or radio afterglow detected GRB 050509B: XRT Error Circle Gehrels et al. (2005) XRT error circle (9.3” radius) intersects giant elliptical galaxy – possibly the host? GRB 050509B: X-Ray Image of Field Image courtesy of C. Sarazin Burst occurred in direction of two rich clusters of galaxies that are merging GRB 050509B: Optical Image of Field Image courtesy of C. Sarazin Probability of positional coincidence with large elliptical galaxy at random place on sky ~ 10-3, but in this direction probability is ~ 3 x 10-2 GRB 050509B: HST Images HST image of GRB field HST image with giant elliptical galaxy subtracted (48 sources in XRT error circle) Images courtesy of D. Fox GRB 050709: HETE-2 Detection Hard spike plus long, soft bump (lasting ~ 200 s) PLE spectrum for spike gives α = -0.53 PL spectrum for long, soft bump gives α = -1.90 no periodic oscillations detected Similar temporal and spectral properties inferred for many BATSE and KONUS short GRBs (Lazzati et al. 2001, Connaughton et al. 2001, Fredericks et al. 2002) Villasenor et al. (2005) GRB 050709: HETE-2 Localization Villasenor et al. (2005) GRB 050709: Accurate Localization HETE-2 IPC error circle on Chandra image, showing X-ray afterglow HST image showing optical afterglow and host galaxy w. Chandra X-ray error circle Images courtesy of D. Fox GRB 050709: Optical Afterglow Discovery of X-ray afterglow led to discovery of optical afterglow Host is dwarf irregular galaxy at z = 0.16 Hjorth et al. (2005) Movie of HST Images Movie courtesy of D. Fox GRB 050709: Panchromatic Studies Radio Optical Jet break X-ray D. Fox et al. (2005) GRB 050709: “Solid Gold” Event Some observational “firsts”: First observation of optical afterglow of short GRB First secure identification of host galaxy First secure measurement of distance to short GRB First determination of where in host galaxy burst occurred Implications Burst occurred in dwarf irregular galaxy undergoing some star formation Energy and luminosity of this short GRB is ~ 103 times smaller than for long GRBs No supernova down to very faint limits (R > 27) Properties of long, soft bump imply burst occurred in lowdensity environment Prompt emission is jet-like GRB 050724: Swift Detection BAT detected bright short GRB Event had hard spike plus long, soft bump like GRB 050709 X-ray, optical, and radio afterglows detected X-ray afterglow exhibited dramatic flaring activity Barthelmy et al. (2005) GRB 050724: X-Ray Afterglow Barthelmy et al. (2005) GRB 050724: Also a “Gold Plated” Burst Swift XRT detection of X-ray afterglow led to discovery of optical afterglow and host galaxy Berger et al. (2005) GRB 050724: Host Galaxy Red elliptical galaxy z = 0.258 L =1.6 L* SFR < 0.03 M yr-1 Kulkarni & Cameron Progenitor Scorecard Energy Density Host Offset No SNe Magnetar 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 Collapsar Binary Coalescence 1 Slide courtesy of D. Frail Are Any Short GRBs Extragalactic Giant Magnetar Flares? Signatures of SGR Giant Flares 100 Fast rise time Total energy <1047 erg Periodicity (if you’re very lucky) Repetition (if you live long enough) GRB050906 was suggested as a candidate, based on the presence of a bright (K~11) galaxy in error box (Levan & Tanvir 2005) Energetics were plausible 100-300 keV FLUENCE/25-100 keV FLUENCE Very hard spectrum (Epeak~ MeV) 1971 BATSE BURSTS 10 1 0.1 0.01 Later analysis showed that spectrum is far too soft GRB051103 is now the only plausible candidate 0.1 1 10 100 T90, SECONDS Slide courtesy of K. Hurley 1000 Key Questions Revisited How far away are they? How much energy do they release? Is the energy release isotropic or collimated? Are the central engines short- or long-lived? Is there any non-relativistic ejecta? In what type of environments do they occur? Host galaxy (+ offset) Circumburst environment Precise positions made possible by observations of long-lived afterglows is the key in the case of long GRBs – and now short GRBs Neutron Star-Neutron Star Mergers Rosswog et al. (2005); see also Ruffert & Janka (2001) and Kobayashi, Laguna, and Rasio (2005) Neutron Star-Black Hole Mergers Kobayashi, Laguna, and Rasio (in progress) Compact Binary Merger Timescales Fryer, Woosley, and Hartmann (1999) Observations of short GRBs will lead to new insights into formation and properties of compact binaries Belcyznski et al. (2002) Nucleosynthesis: r-Process Nuclei Tidal forces squeeze merging neutron star(s) like a tube of toothpaste Nuclear matter is decompressed and ejected This process is expected to produce nuclei far from the β-decay instability Neutron-rich environment will lead to rapid neutron capture Such a process can be expected to produce r-process nuclei in observed mass range Narrow abundance peaks corresponding to neutron “magic” numbers are expected, as observed Gravitational Waves K.Thorne / NSF Review Figure courtesy of D. Fox 2005: A Summer of Short GRBs Detection by HETE-2 and Swift of four short GRBs in summer of 2005 (3 discussed here) have led to solution of greatest remaining mystery of GRBs: The Nature of short GRBs Follow-up observations at X-ray, optical, and radio wavelengths have led to compelling evidence that short GRBs come from merging compact binaries (as David Eichler, Mario Livio, Tsvi Piran, and David Schramm conjectured in 1989) It is now clear that short GRBs will provide important insights into formation and properties of compact binaries Short GRBs may well be a source of r-process nuclei (as David Schramm and Jim Lattimer conjectured in 1974) Short GRBs are powerful sources of gravitational waves and may well be the first gravitational wave sources detected by advanced LIGO Short GRB Milestones Neutron Star-Neutron Star Mergers Neutron Star-Black Hole Mergers GRB 050509B: HST Imaging 48 sources in XRT error circle Error radius = 9.3 arcsec 4 HST Epochs May 14 to June 10 Giant elliptical L=1.5L* SFR<0.1 M yr-1 Kulkarni et al. 2005 WELL-STUDIED SHORT BURSTS DATE DETECTED BY z Eγ,iso, erg EVIDENCE FOR BEAMING? Epeak, keV 790613 IPN 0.09?* 6x1049 ? ?** 050509B Swift 0.225?* 2.7x1048 ? ?** 050709B HETE 0.16 3x1049 Yes; 0.25 rad 84 050813 Swift 0.722 1.7x1050 ? ?** 050906 Swift 0.031?* 1.2x1047 ? ?** *Based on probability argument **Spectrum not fit to a Band model